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As a mom of boys, there is a smell I encounter almost daily: the aroma of urine. Last summer, I noticed this smell emanating from my son’s room.
A quick whiff of the sheets. Nope.
A quick scan of the room for wet undies. Nope.
I convinced myself all was well and carried on with my day.
Except the odor began to fill the house and by Day Three I was desperate to locate its whereabouts. I narrowed it down to the closet and then deducted my son’s pitstop was inside his giant lego bin.
BINGO!!!
My husband demanded we throw the entire bin away. I refused. The kids were always building creative works of art with them. Two hours later—after scrubbing each individual lego by-hand in the bathtub— they were squeaky clean.
Legos were created with the intent of building and God has given us a tool to build with too: our words.
Proverbs 18:21 states, “DEATH and LIFE are in the power of the tongue.”
Every word you utter has power. Every syllable either builds up or tears down. Your words have eternal impact. The problem is, we believe the lie our voice doesn’t matter.
Growing up, I was the shy kid who hide behind her mother’s leg and never talked to strangers. I would have spent my life believing my voice had no power if it wasn’t for my encounter with Jesus as a teen. Suddenly, I realized the power of my words. Their might was not rooted in my wisdom or eloquence—rather their power was found in their origin. The God of the universe wanted to speak in and through me.
And that changes everything.
A week after the lego escapade, my kids and I headed to the beach. At one point, I realized my daughter had stolen a blue ball from an adorable brown-eyed boy. After a bit of a fight, I pried the toy out of her hand and threw it to the cutie onshore. There was something vaguely familiar about this boy. Suddenly, a scene from my days as a youth pastor flashed before my eyes:
Katie had approached me right after the service.
“Can I talk to you?” she asked sheepishly.
“Of course!”
As tears coursed down her cheeks, she shared with me how her close friend was in a bad relationship and had just found out she was pregnant.
“She is going to get an abortion tomorrow. Can you help?”
To be honest, I had no clue what to do. I shot up a quick prayer and headed over to the girl’s workplace. Pulling in, our headlights shined on a woman cleaning out her car who happened to be the girl’s mother. My heart skipped a beat and I busted open my car door with a string of words spilling out of my mouth.
"Hi! I'm a youth pastor. Your daughter is in a tough spot. She is pregnant and planning on heading tomorrow morning to an abortion clinic. She is afraid of disappointing you.”
The mother burst into tears and thanked me. As I climbed in my car and drove away, I caught a glimpse of the mom embracing her daughter in the rearview mirror.
That girl NEVER made it to the abortion clinic the next day.
Years later, I stumbled upon a picture of this girl’s beautiful brown-eyed boy on Facebook—the same boy who smiled and waved at me from the water’s edge as I handed him his blue ball.